BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
Scottish Law Commission (Reports) |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Law Commission >> Scottish Law Commission (Reports) >> Conversion of Long Leases (Report) [2006] SLC 204(Appendix_C) (December 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/other/SLC/Report/2006/204(Appendix_C).html Cite as: [2006] SLC 204(Appendix_C) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
Appendix C
Survey of long leases
Aim of the survey
Methodology
Number of leases examined | % of leasehold titles examined | Number of leases in 1951 | |
Ayr | 303 | 100 | 1988 |
Clackmannan | 193 | 100 | 305 |
Lanark | 1220 | 25 | 4153 |
Renfrew | 963 | 50 | 655 |
Table 1: Number of leases examined
It will be seen that the survey examined all leasehold title sheets for Clackmannan and Ayr, one half of the title sheets for Renfrew, and one quarter of the title sheets for Lanark. For practical reasons, the search did not include the Register of Sasines. There is therefore excluded from the survey any pre-existing lease which saw no activity during the period under review of a kind which would induce first registration in the Land Register.
• title number
• date of registration
• address of property
• name of original landlord
• consideration
• start year of lease
• duration
• rent
• partial assignations and allocations of rent
• subleases
• whether the minerals had been excepted.
• name of original landlord for 55 leases
• consideration for 114 leases
• start year for 57 leases
• duration for 80 leases
• original rent for 268 leases
• whether the lease had been assigned in part or not for 71 leases[8]
• whether on a partial assignation the rent under the original lease had been allocated for 27 leases[9]
• the amount of the allocated rent, where the rent had been allocated, for 12 leases[10]
• whether the lease was a sublease for 244 leases and
• whether the minerals had been excepted for 37 leases.
Incidence and distribution
Initial duration[15]
• 1786 leases had an initial duration of more than 175 years while the remaining 813 leases had a duration of 175 years or less. Thus the ratio of "ultra-long" to "ordinary" leases is approximately 2:1.
• Most leases were granted for either 20, 25, 60, 99, or 999 years.
• Only 2 leases were granted for between 126 and 175 years.
• No leases were granted for between 176 and 199 years.[17]
• Only 21 leases were granted for between 200 and 299 years.
• 1765 leases (68%) were granted for 300 years or longer.
• 380 leases were granted for between 700 and 998 years.[18]
• 1269 leases (49%) were granted for a period of 999 years.
• The longest duration was 1,000,000 years.[19]
Initial duration | 20 | 25 | 60 | 99 | 999 |
Number of leases | 60 | 313 | 51 | 60 | 1269 |
% of total | 2.31% | 12.04% | 1.96% | 2.31% | 48.83% |
Average number of years to expiry |
12 | 14 | 50 | 74 | 860 |
Shortest number of years to expiry[20] | 1 | 1 | 30 | 55 | 745 |
Longest number of years to expiry |
18 | 24 | 59 | 98 | 995 |
Table 2 Initial duration
Unexpired duration
• 86 leases for which there was insufficient information
• 25 leases which may be continuing on tacit relocation, and
• 35 leases with 1645 or more years remaining.
Unexpired duration (in years) | Number of leases | % of total[21] | Number of leases of 175 years or under | Number of leases of more than 175 years |
0 – 49 | 671 | 25.88% | 671 | 0 |
50 – 175 | 184 | 7.10% | 141 | 43 |
176 – 199 | 7 | 0.27% | 0 | 7 |
200 – 500 | 34 | 1.31% | 0 | 34 |
500 – 700 | 166 | 6.40% | 0 | 166 |
700 – 999 | 1496 | 57.69% | 0 | 1496 |
1000 – 1000000 | 35 | 1.35% | 0 | 35 |
Table 3 Unexpired duration
Initial duration by year of grant
Rent[25]
• 1160 (68.03%) have a rent of £5 or less
• 505 (29.62%) have a rent of between £5.01 and £30, and
• 14 (0.82%) have a rent of between £30.01 and £50.
• 99 leases (15.37%) have a rent of £10 or less
• 33 leases (5.12%) have a rent of between £10.01 and £100
• 54 leases (8.39%) have a rent of between £100.01 and £1000
• 133 leases (20.65%) have a rent of between £1000.01 and £5000
• 250 leases (38.82%) have a rent of between £5000.01 and £50000
• 73 leases (11.34%) have a rent of between £50000.01 and £400000
• 1 lease has a rent of £700000, and
• 1 lease has a rent of £1152750.
The rent depends both on the date when the lease was granted and on the nature of the property leased. However, the amount of the rent is not always a reliable indicator of the date of the grant. For example, two 999-year leases were granted in the 1990s for a rent of £1 and £0.01 respectively.
Leases of more than 175 years
Residential leases of 175 years or less
• 8 leases with a rent of £10 or less
• 2 leases with a rent between £11 and £100
• 7 leases with a rent between £101 and £500
• 3 leases with a rent between £501 and £1000
• 4 leases with a rent between £1001 and £2000
• 3 leases with a rent between £2001 and £3000
• 1 lease with a rent between £3001 and £4000
• 2 leases with a rent between £4001 and £5000
• 2 leases with a rent between £5000 and £8500
• 3 leases with a rent over £8500.
Chart 1 – Distribution of leases of 1030 years or less
Chart 2 – Distribution of leases of 175 years or less
Chart 3 – Distribution of leases of between 175 and 998 years
Chart 4 – Years remaining for unexpired leases with less than 1645 years to run
Chart 5 – Minimum/Maximum length of lease for each year of grant for period 1692–1750
... Minimum length for year ( Maximum length for year
Chart 6 – Minimum /Maximum length of lease for each year of grant for period 1750–1800
- Minimum length for year ... Maximum length for year
Chart 7 – Minimum/Maximum length of lease for each year of grant for period 1800–1850
- Minimum length for year ... Maximum length for year
Chart 8 – Minimum/Maximum length of lease for each year of grant for period 1850–1900
- Minimum length for year ... Maximum length for year
Chart 9 – Minimum/Maximum length of lease for each year of grant for period 1900–1950
- Minimum length for year ... Maximum length for year
Chart 10 – Minimum/Maximum length of lease for each year of grant for period 1950–2000
- Minimum length for year ... Maximum length for year
Chart 11 - Average annual rent (in £s) for leases granted between 1692 and 1870
- Average rent for year
Chart 12 – Average annual rent (in £s) for leases granted between 1870 and 1950
- Average rent for year
Chart 13 – Average annual rent (in £s) for leases granted between 1950 and 1964
- Average rent for year
Chart 14 – Average annual rent (in £s) for leases granted between 1964 and 2000
- Average rent for year
Chart 15 – Length of residential leases of 175 years or less granted before 1975
Chart 16 – Years remaining for residential leases of 175 years or less granted before 1975
Note
In Chart 16:
The 10 leases with less than 20 years to run were granted for less than 60 years.
The 5 leases of between 25 and 54 years to run were granted for between 60 and 98 years.
The 9 leases with between 55 and 70 years to run, and 2 of the leases with 73 years to run were granted for 99 years.
The lease with 20 years to run, that with 72 years to run, 2 of those with 73 years to run and the 5 leases with more than 80 years to run, were granted for longer than 99 years.
Note 1 We are grateful to the staff of Registers of Scotland for supplying a list of the leasehold titles for each county, providing information on each title, and allowing the title sheets to be inspected. In particular we wish to thank Mr Ian Davis, Mr John Marshall, Mr Marcus MacKenzie, Mr Douglas Pentland, and the staff in Customer Services, for their advice and assistance. [Back] Note 2 We wish to thank Ms Marina Miller for creating a database for the survey. [Back] Note 3 In April 1951 the Keeper of the Registers of Scotland carried out for the Guthrie Committee a survey of all search sheets in the Register of Sasines for the period 1905–1951. Its findings were published in appendix II of the Guthrie Report. [Back] Note 4 In both categories Lanark was in first place. This is probably still the case. O’Donnell and Rennie found that the greatest concentration of leasehold titles was in Lanarkshire: see D O’Donnell and R Rennie, “Non-Feudal Landholdings in Scotland” (1998) 3 SLPQ 31 at 49. [Back] Note 5 Lanark became an operational area on 3 January 1984, and Ayr on 1 April 1997. [Back] Note 6 Clackmannan became an operational area on 1 October 1992. Kirkcudbright and Wigtown became operational areas on 1 April 1997. [Back] Note 7 Renfrew became an operational area on 6 April 1981. [Back] Note 8 There were 1503 assignations in part. [Back] Note 9 1.80% of the 1503 assignations in part. [Back] Note 10 2.05% of the 586 leases for which the rent had been allocated. [Back] Note 11 See para 1.4 n 12 of the discussion paper. [Back] Note 12 This figure is the percentage of search sheets attributable to surviving leases. In calculating this percentage there has been excluded from the total number of search sheets the search sheets of the 1024 leases in those counties that had expired by 1951. [Back] Note 13 Research in files from the early 1950s in the National Archives of Scotland suggests that various estates around Scotland granted 99-year leases of residential properties, such as the Breadalbane Estate, the Buccleuch Estate, the Hamilton & Kinneil Estate, the Kippendavie Estate, the Macdonald Estate, and the Seafield Estate. [Back] Note 14 This is supported by the evidence received from practitioners with experience of long leases. They referred to pockets of leases in Alva, Ardrossan, Saltcoats, Stevenson, and Wishaw. [Back] Note 15 It was not possible to ascertain the duration of 80 leases so the sample here is 2599 leases. [Back] Note 16 For practical reasons the charts exclude leases with an initial duration of more than 1030 years, of which there were 44 ranging from 1,037 years to 1,000,000 years. [Back] Note 17 The break between 125 years and 200 years may be due to the practice of granting commercial leases for 125 years to encompass the three 40-year cycles of building, trading and demolition. [Back] Note 18 14.62% of the sample leases. Some of the 380 leases may be subleases granted for the remaining term of leases originally granted for 999 or 900 years. 41.35% (184) of all leases identified as subleases for which the length was known (445 leases) were granted for over 125 and under 999 years. Others may be re-grants of original 999 or 900 year leases which have been lost or not recorded. [Back] Note 19 11 leases were granted for 1,000,000 years. All were of properties in Paisley and were granted between 1825 and 1892. [Back] Note 20 Disregarding those which may be continuing on tacit relocation. [Back] Note 21 The base figure is 2593 leases. This is derived by subtracting from the full total of 2679 leases the 86 leases in respect of which the unexpired duration is uncertain. The figure includes leases which may be continuing by tacit relocation. [Back] Note 22 But, for practical reasons, excluding leases of more than 999 years. [Back] Note 23 Land Tenure Reform (Scotland) Act 1974 ss 8 to 10. [Back] Note 24 Based on the address of the property and the name of the landlord, we estimate that all but 11 of the 173 999-year leases were of residential property. [Back] Note 25 Rent here is the original unallocated rent under the lease, as most allocations do not appear to have had the landlord’s approval. See para 3.14 of the discussion paper. [Back] Note 26 The average rent of £60 in 1873 is due to the 10 properties which form part of a lease granted in 1873 for a rent of £101.54. The average of £24.17 in 1924 reflects a single lease granted for £24.17. 5 properties in the survey are held under partial assignations of this lease. [Back] Note 27 However there were no such leases with between 200 and 500 years remaining. [Back] Note 28 Land Tenure Reform (Scotland) Act 1974 ss 8 to 10. [Back] Note 29 This was borne out by the survey. 318 leases in Wishaw were examined, of which 263 leases were granted for 999 years and 298 were granted for at least 812 years. The length of 3 leases in Wishaw was unknown. 18 leases in Ardrossan were examined, and the lengths of 14 of these leases was known. 11 were for 999 years, and 2 for 855 years. [Back] Note 30 This was borne out by the survey. 171 leases in Alva were examined. Of the 163 leases of which the length was known, 161 were granted for 999 years and 1 for 979 years. [Back]